Rag Egh 4. 1- 1* V A A' THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, July 24, 1970 Friday, July 24, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page E.ht THEMICHIGN DAIL The Louise Bernikow, ABEL, Tri- dent Press, $7.95. By DEBORAH LINDERMAN On Feb. 10, 1962, Colonel Rudolph Ivanovice Abel (alias Emil R. Goldfus), a Soviet agent having practiced espionage in the United States for nine years, was exchanged for Francis Gary Powers, our U-2 man in Russia. The e x c h a n g e ceremoniously took place in the early morning at the midpoint of the Bridge of Unity in Berlin, was an- nounced the same day by Pres- ident Kennedy, and formally ended the career of the Soviet "master spy" in this country. This book documents that car- eer and the personality of the shrewd, wry, and self-disciplin- ed man who "spied"-whatever that means--for our so-called top atomic secrets until he was apprehended in 1957. His apprehension, which re- sulted because he was informed on from inside, caused a hulla- baloo. It occurred during an- other phase of the cold war, in an era of anti-Communist hys- teria, before the thaw, soon af- ter the execution of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, the arrest of Morton Sobell, the arrest of many not be successful to be criminal and that the existence of a con- spiracy had been proven in court. Although the. United States press and government called Abel the biggest and best spy ever, Soviet reports make few claims about what he actu- ally got during all those years. He has been designated a Hero and decorated with the Order of Lenin but it is not improbable that this occurred as much in the interests of international propaganda as to reward his actual accomplishments. An offshoot of Bernikow's new book about Abel is the ex- pose of the wastefulness of the spy game, with its elaborate' ap- paratus, its dangers, the taxing burden on its agents, and its meager yield. Certainly this particular spy is no hero of his- tory; he is a lonely man doing tedious and demanding work, on foreign land, in circum- stances of extreme isolation. He is skilled at playing his role-- hiding his identity, handling the tools of the trade, the hollow containers, the soft film, the codes, the microdots, the secret drops-and at putting on the right look, the right accent, the right demeanor. But he does this not necessarily expecting a pay- mask4 they took Goldfus in and he fit very well, an intense looking man with artistic sensitivities and an old-worldly style. Life in the Ovington building was' casual and friendly. The group worked hard, shared their ideas, talked openly but valued their privacy, and though they found Goldfus a little vague and con- tradictory - something about him didn't fit -- they accorded him his. Silverman developed, as they all did, a friendship with Goldfus that was partly serious, partly giddy, and .al- ways interesting. When this man who was his friend turned out to be "the enemy's" fore- most spy, his sense of betrayal was as keen as his surprise. In- deed, with the newspapers call- ing Goldfus "the chief of the Soviet espionage network in the United States," all the Ovington artists had to make the difficult adjustment of replacing the reality of Emil Goldfus with a man who was only an illusion to them. Silverman is the silent part- ner in the authorship of this book, and one of several people whose personal testimonies on Abel added to what was already known about him from news- papers and the other media. Yet this book is not simply a work of integration, it is a quest for the man behind the aliases. Sil- verman and Bernikow set out to find who Abel was, Silverman because he had in a complicated sense been friends and been be- trayed, and Bernikow because she was fascinated by the story of this man with so many layers and poses. Their effort to recon- cile Abel's several facets does not work however; they never get to the bottom of the man, and if indeed it is impossible to get to the bottom of any man. the gap between Abel's public aspects - cold, brilliant, and manipulative - and his private ones - timid, warm, wry and witty - was wider than it is in most men. This gap both de- fined him as a spy and limited him as a human being-limited him at least for others, though whether for himself is yet an- other matter. Not the least of the mysteries is why, having talent, brilliance and resources, he should have chosen to use himself in such apparently emp- ty and sterile work. Making do in the federal pen- itentiary in Atlanta, he wrote to Silverman and invited a regular Of a correspondence. Silverman con- sidered carefully, but because of the situation (having met some- one in New York through some- one else, you can be implicated in anything) and the times (even Stevenson supporters were suspect), he refused. The deci- sion was painful. One of the most abitious pieces of detective work that he and the author undertook in search of Abel was a trip to Moscow. They had promising connections and in- tended to see him, and by talk- ing face to face to bring him into focus; but they never -got their man. The trip was a mi- crocosm of the whole Abel affair -they encountered one evasion after another but left Moscow S py was particularly crude; he never did master English, his tongue was heavy and got caught in the strange morphs of the lan- guage, wreaking grotesque and comic changes upon it. Most of his association with Abel was spent in fear and trembling: he was stone drunk half the time, looked absurdly obvious in his spy costume - an old'" blue tie with red stripes, and a pipe which he puffedon in a peculiar fashion-and was jealous of Abel and bore him real malice. For his part Abel must have found his associate intolerably clumsy. This book is as much a per- sonal memorial as it is a jour- nalistic document; it is inform- ed by anecdotes and remem- For Direct Classified Ad Scriice,1ehme 7i0 12NMoon Deadim Monday through Friday, 10:00 to 3:00 books bo "having glimsed our story. In that peculiar uncertainty about what was real that hounded us -from our arrival in Moscow to Viktor's (their connection) 'nothing at this time'-we had our landscape. In our own es- capade-the back-street meet- ings and the coded communica- tions and the double-talk, dou- ble-think, double-faced opera- tion of ourselves and the people we met . .. we had out plot. In the parts of the puzzle, pieces that never coalesced, prisms of ourselves, other people's selves, we found Colonel Rudolph Abel. If he ever existed." There is of course no doubt that an espionage agent who went by the name of Colonel Rudolph Abel didin a literal sense exist. Of the whole ring of co-conspirators that he was sup- posed to lead, only one was ever proved to exist too. This was his assistant and thegovernment's informant, a thick Finn named Reino Hayhanen, blond and ruddy, who got into the KBG, realized somewhere along the line just what he was into and decided he wanted to get out. His wayout was defection, and of course the betrayal of his superior, Hayhanen was not a partic- ularly intelligent man, and he brances - Emil at -a Jewish wedding, Emil sketching a nude, Abel in the prison yard at At- lanta. And 'while it -is obvious that Abel was extremely likeable, admirable, and memorable, this acount of him strains between its public and private aspects without entirely bringing them into balance. The author's problematic point of view con- tributes to this strain, for there are scenes and events sketched with sure dramatic accuracy but left undocumented; we are told what people looked like and exactly how they felt, but are left to wonder how the author could have known. And though this kind of fictionalizing could work very well alone, it is un- fortunately brought to scale by some hard-nosed deductive jour- nalistic reporting in which the last detail, the finest legality, the official story, are firmly nailed down. Moreover, there is an odd thinness to the book even though both Abel and Hay- hanen are characterized with real magnitude: While it is true that the whole Abel affair sub- sists among ironies, perhaps the fact that the quest for the real Abel comes to nothing makes the anti-heroic, anti-climactic substance of the account seem less ironic than finally unim- portant. FOR RENT 2 BDRM, FURN. units on campus. avail. for fall. McKinley Assoc., 663- owl 15t 3-BDRM. on campus apt. for fall. 2 bathrooms, dishwasher, 10 closets, bi- level. Char or Jean, 665-5269. 34C52 ROYAL DUTCH APTS., 715 Church St.; Edinburgh Apts, 912 Brown St.; King's Inn Apts., 939 Dewey, taking applications for fall rental. Call 761- 6156 or 761-3466. 33059 711 ARCH Modern 2-bedroom furnished apart- ments for fall. Ideal for 3 or 4. $260/ mo. Featuring: Dishwasher_ Balcony - Air conditioning Laundry- Parking Phone 761-7848 or 482-8867 36C71 LOOKING? Why not tell people what you are looking for? Tell them cheaply, yet effectively in Daily classifieds. 764- 0557, 11 a.m.-2 p.m., 764-0557. DU AVAIL. FOR SUMME1R & FALL ALBERT TERRACE 1700 Geddes Beautifully decorated, large 2 bedroom, bi-level apartments. Stop in daily noon to 5:30 (Mon.-Fri.), 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sat. or phone 761-1717 or 665- 8825. 11Ctc 2 BDRM. FURN. units on campus, avail, for fall. McKinley Assoc. 663- 6448. 50Ctc AUGUST OCCUPANCY A delightfully spacious, quiet, clean 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished apartment for 3 or 4. Campus area, ample closets. storage and parking. Call on Resident Manager, Apart- ment 102, 721 S. Forest, Ctc SANS SOUCIAPTS. Luxury Apartments Near Stadium Air conditionedj Adequate-Parking Dishwasher Near Campus Bus Stop 4-Men Apt. $240 5-Men Apt. $280 Some 2-men apt. left also E Call 662-2952 31ctc CHOICE APTS. For Fall. 2. 3, and 4 man, close to campus. 769-2800. Ann Arbor Trust Co., Property Management Dept., 100 S. Main. 3Ctc CAMPUS NEW, FURNISHED APARTMENTS I FOR FALL DAHLMANN APARTMENTS 545 CHURCH ST. 761-7600 38te BARGAIN CORNER Sam's Store NEED LEVIS? VISITF USFR FOR FOR RENT NEAR MEDICAL CENTER 1035 Walls St.-Furnished, new, modern efficiency, 1 and 2 bedroom available, 1-864-3852 or 665-77. 11Ctc 1 OR 2 NEEDED to take over lease for Sept-May. Beautiful bi-level. Call 769-7467 after 5. 25C45 TV RENTALS--Students only. $10.40/ mo. Includes prompt delivery service, and pick-up. Call Nejac, 662-5671. 27tc FURNISHED-FALL RENTAL 1 and 2 Bedroom Apts. 1111 S. State 1506 Packard 1-864-3852, 353-7389 or 761-236 after 5. 12Ctc Campus-Hospital Fall Occupancy Furnished Apartments Campus Management, Inc. 662-7787 335 E. Huron 47Ct THE ABBEY THE LODGE CARRIAGE HOUSE THE FORUM VISCOUNT still the local favorites! Several select apartments available for summer and fall semesters in each of these modern buildings. Charter Realty Fine Campus Apartments 1335 5s University 665-8825 loctc BUSINESS SERVICES YOUNG WOMAN, six years university teaching and editing experience, lit- erature M.A, plus Ph.D. hours, wou d like free-lance editing or writing. Excellent references. Call .662-0348 evenings; 764-0510 mornings. JD53 COUPLE WISHES house-sitting spot for fall semester. Excellent refer- ences and experience. Call 663-4323. 28J48 THESES, PAPERS (incl. technical) typ- ed. Experienced, professional; IBM! Selectric. Quick service. 663-6291. 42Jtc EXPERIENCED SECRETARY desires work in her home. Thesis, technical typing, stuffing etc. IBM selectric. Call Jeanette, 971-2463. 12Jtc TASK ALL THESES-MANUSCRIPTS-PAPERS expertly typed-edited PRINTING - THESES - FLYERS 1 BROCHURES economical, 24-hr. round-the-clock service FOR ANY OFFICE SERVICE call THE PROFESSIONALS 10 years experience in Ann Arbor 761-4146 or 761-1187 1900 W. Stadium Blvd. 26Ptc; MULTI PLE TYP I NG SERVICE Thesis Service Papers Dissertations General 0Offce and Secretarial Work Pick-Up and Delivery Available Prompt Service CALL 485-2086 ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD for 2 student girls, linens, quiet area, $23, for fall. 549 4th St. 3256 USED CARS FIAT 850 Spider, 1969, good condition. Call 449-2875. 29N52 ALPINE 1725. 1966. one owner, exc. cond., no rust, radials, rack, other extras. $1000 or make offer. 663-7042 after 5. 30N58 '69 FIAT 124 station wagon. Asking $1700, will bargin. 227-5411. Brighton. 31N52 1965 MG-B, very clean, ex. mech. shape, 3 tops, overdrive, $875. 761-1083 after 5. 26N53 TRANSPORTATION Special! '62 Olds 88, good tires, interior good. must sell -$100. 663-4879 anytime. 27N55 DODGE Polara 1962-361 hp automatic. 61.000 miles, $225 or best offer. 434- 3195, 763-2227. 28N53 1969 FIAT 124 Sp. Coupe, gold, A/C, 5 sp. trans., radio, new tires. 66381111 after 9 p.m. 24N53I VOLVO, 1969, red, radio, great car. Call 668-8221 between 5 and 7. 25N53I The Best in Good Used Cameras WE BUY, SELL, TRADE Everything Photographic I Louise Bernikowu Gordon Lonsdale in London, and at a time when our country never in the least acknowledged having any spies at all. After the fumble over Powers and the U-2 incident, everyone knew that the United States also re- cruited, trained, and sent afield innumerable secret agents, and the public image of the spy slowly began to change. By 1964, spies were much in the news; a book called The In- visible Government had much to say to the public about the CIA; where the cult of the spy had once been exotic and bi- zarre, full of covert rituals and mysterious meetings, the more information there was to be had about it, the more ordinary it now appeared. Spying was a public business done by real men for defined reasons and with limited aims, some more sinister than others. When Abel was caught, how- ever, the mystique of the spy was very powerful. Whole ide- ologies were in question. In the days of I-Like-Ike politics, Abel was perceived, by an act of synecdoche, to threaten nothing less than the national well- being. Cliches to that effect were much in use, and at Abel's trial the government prosecutor officially alleged "a serious of- fense . . . directed at our very existence and through us at the free world and civilization itself, particularly in light of the times." The magnitude of this charge is curious considering the likeli- hood that Abel's pickings were quite slim. The decision of the court that found Abel guilty stated as much: "It is true that there is no evidence indicating that Abel or his co-conspirators ever succeeded in gathering or in transmitting any unlawful in- formation. There is not the slightest hint in the record that these espionage agents met with any success." The court re- iterated that a conspiracy need off. Abel probably dug up some information but he got nothing very secret or valuable. His years of dedication and scru- pulousness, and all the training and money invested in him, may very well have ended in a few pins and paper clips. Spies, like nuclear deterrents, are kept to cancel each other out. Miss Bernikow's book, then. is in fact about an anti-hero. and her preoccupation with the man called Abel is an existen- tial one; how had he worn his masks so well, indeed become the masks, and still remained himself? How had he juggled all the identities he was required to assume and still not lost his talent for existing inside him - self? She follows him from his illegal immigration into the United States in 1948, using the papers of a dead Lithuanian, through several changes of mask and identity, a man who moved from one small resident hotel to another in New York's upper west side, using various covers and doing his quiet work, Her angle on his life comes from her aquaintance with an artist named Burt Silverman who knew Abel - and oddly knew him quite well-as someone else. Colonel Abel's last mask was Emil Goldfus and his last cover was photographer. As Goldfus- photographer he rented studio space in a rather large building called Ovington Studios situated on the edge of a wasteland in Brooklyn Heights. The building was occupied by many artists and writers who paid cheap rent for light and roomy studios, and here Goldfus set up shop in late 1953. Among the young artists working in the Ovington Stu- dios were Burt Silverman, David Levine (the New York Review of Books cartoonist), and Jules Feiffer--all ambitious, Jewish, well-educated, left-wing, none of them established yet, but all of them soon to be. Gradually' BIKES AND SCOOTERS '70 KAWASAKI 350 A7, windshield, turn signals, cover. Call 761-6547. 38Z53 1948 INJDIAN, 500cc. twin, rigid frame. springer forks original Indian saddle bags. $300 or best offer. 761-0745. ZD53 MOTORCYCLE tune-up and service. By appointment only. Call 665-3114. 26271 PHOTO SUPPLIES NIKON FTN, macro lens, still guaran- teed, case, $380, lists new $500. Nihon 200mm lens, $145. 769-3169 after 6. 31D5. NIKKORMAT FTN, 4 lenses, 24mm.. 50mm.. 125mm.. 600mm. $550. 426-1 8969. 30D48 AT CENTURY i t V f 1969 BMW - financial depravity forces sale of my well kept signal red 2002. Has slight engine mods, quartz lights & Halda. Price negotiable. 769-0227. ND53 FOR SALE-Yellow TR-6, 12,000 miles, one owner, perfect condition. 769- 2404. 22N52 WANTED TO RENT WANTED for August only-Small apt. Call 663-6890. 24L55 RESP. GRAD student needs apt. for fall. Can afford up to $100 and 20 min. drive to Northeast. Call collect 216-831-1472. 25L57 2 BDRM. unit in house near campus wkitchen, bath. 663-5967 or 761-7985 --for fall. 22L52 5 Honors College Seniors seek THREE BDRM. HOUSE or Apartment for fall 971-2634 or 662-2603 23L5-- MISCELLANEOUS WANTED: Lessons in making pottery, call Sherry, 769-7397. 31M25 TRANSPORTATION NEED DRIVER, Bloomington, Ind., July 31. 761-4949. 48053 GOING TO DENVER the weekend of July 31st. would like one rider. Joel Epstein, 764-0248. 49G52 FOR SALE 3 TICKETS to Goose Lake for $10 each. Call Ann, 665-6747. 46B54 PORTABLE STEREO with AM-FM radio, $75. Call 761-0232. B54 SONY TV, radio, GE stereo, vacuum cleaner, 6'x9' rug, china, tea table, etc. Call 769-6568. 45B52 3/4 K. ROUND DIAMOND Engagement ring, appraised value, $760. 769-4640. 44B52 VM TABLE-MODEL Stereo, mahagony cabinet. Olivetti portable typewriter with case. Each $25. Call 764-0510 mornings, or 662-0348 evenings. BDS3 FOR SAL--Small 2 cu. ft. refrigerator, Sony TC-250 tape deck. Also I need roommates for fall (or room). Call Jeff, 663-8440. 39B48 RECEIVER AM-FM stereo, $75; mono- amplifier, $15. Call 665-2111 after four. 19Btc ROOMMATES WANTED FEMALE GRAD seeking 1-2 roommates for fal. 761-9583, Judi. 22Y53 FEMALE, 21. needs roommates and apt. for fall in AA, prefer grad, prof. Call Joan, 1-341-1654 (collect). 23Y53 FEMALE for lg. bi-level apt. in house, near campus and hospital. Own 1g. partitioned bedroom. Aug. occupancy possible. Box 47, M. Daily. 21Y52 BABYSITTER needed nights. Mon.-Fri. Call 971-5748 before 4 p.m. 19Hte APPLICATIONS are now being accepted for executive director of the Washte- naw Office of Economic Opportunity. 662-3172. 18H59 MALE UNDERGRADUATE to help prof. (in wheechair) in exchange for room and board. "61-9034 after 5. 17H53 TEACHERS, counselors, specialists - Fall openings, many out of state. Cline Teachers Agency. Box 607. East Lansing, Mich. 48823. 16H53 LOOKING FOR A JOB? Talented or experienced or interestedn in a particular field? Try placing a Michigan Daily "BUSINESS SERV- ICES" or "PERSONAL" ad-and help a job find YOU. HDtcI HELP WANTED for Mike Stillwagon, 301 yr. old former poverty lawyer now running for Congress. Straight or freak - anybody welcome. Call 769-1 3288 or drop in 2004 Traver Rd. 10H53 LOST AND FOUND FOUND-Grey and white tiger cat with green collar. Green eyes. Call 764- 9270, after 5 663-9026. 30AD54 LOST DOG-Reward will be paid for recovery of 4-yr. old male brown and white English Springer Spaniel, miss- ing since July 1, family pet, not a hunter. 475-3341 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m., or 668-8623 anytime. 29A55 FOUND on the Diag at the Keif pipe place on Saturday, July 15th, a paper! bag, a purple handerchief, etc. Call 665-2182 at suppertime. 8AD52 FOUND-1 pair men's (?) tinted glasses, blue leather case, Sunday night on S. Univ. 769-4714. AD52 SUMMER SUBLET PRIVATE ROOM in 3-man. July-Aug. w/fall option, $50. 665-4557. 18U54 SUBLET-Until Aug. 22, large beautiful apt, Oakland. 1-785-0743, 17U52 GIRL NEEDED for 5-man apt. Now thru Aug. 25. $30. 663-6621 anytime. 16U5- MOD. EFF. for Aug. 5 min. from UGLI. Negotiable, swimming pool. Cal f663- 7846 after 5, keep trying. 10U46 +I 1 ' , I I I ,t_ DARKROOM SUPPLIES LUMINOUS PAPER Repairs on all makes Century Camera (At our new location) 4254 N. Woodward, Royal Oak Between 13 and 14 Mile Rd. LI 9-6355 Take I-94 to Southfield Expr. Nort) to 13 Mile Road-then East to Woodward and North (Michigan Bank. Security and Oiier Charges accepted) E tA HELP WANTEDj Irstru uses 665- SUND GRAD Sun. trap pare PREP fere 29. p.. Learn sphe j of 3 and danc ple p.m. SUND Tab THE buy CHE '1. SIGN for Han MEET Dar< 8:30- NOT C tom r WEEK Grot ite 616 E l Elc mmowmmmwo Ex- Mntells all William V. Turner, HOOVER'S F.B.I.: THE MEN AND THE MYTH, Sherbourne Press, $7.95. By JIM NEUBACHER I grew up believing in the Federal Bureau of Investigation. I read the teen-market novels dealing with the exploits of the "G-Men" and remember think- ing sadly, at age 10, when I got my first pair of glasses, that I would never be able to pass the physical to be either a pilot or~ an agent of that federal force. All through high school, how- ever, I remained faithful. I made sure not to miss the tele- vision screening of "The F.B.I. Story" with Jimmy Stewart and Vera Miles. It wasn't until my first year at the University, as a reporter for The Daily, that I had my first real encounter with the "other" F.B.I., the F.B.I. that lies behind- public- ity and headlines and propo- ganda. Aided by incurable optimism, I decided that a feature story on the operations of the F.B.I. in Ann Arbor would make an interesting assignment; one fine day I marched unannounced into the local office on the sec- ond floor of the First National Bldg. in downtown Ann Arbor. (They have since moved to Stadium Blvd.) Gathering my courage, I walked in and found myself in a small, cluttered room: tables filled with reports and papers, two shirtsleeved men doing desk work. Real, live G-Men, in the flesh. One fellow pleasantly asked if he could help me, and I explained my request to them. Alas, it was to be denied (Bur- eau policy I was informed), and then the phone rang in another room. The second agent, who had remained at his desk, went in to answer it, and soon after, called in his colleague. T h e y closed the door and I was left alone momentarily. A minute soon grew into five, then ten; I stood up and began looking around. W h a t I saw made no particular impression until my eye caught sight of a copy of The Daily. What I saw after that disturbed me no end. Next to the issue of The Daily was a pair of scissors, and next to that, the G-Man's handiwork - a clipping of an article by Ron Landsman which had ap- peared the Sunday previous to my visit. It dealt with a group of ROTC cadets out on field exercises- in "counter-guerrilla training" and other jungle war- fare techniques. It was a very straightforward story, done with the permission of the ROTC of- ficer leading t h e exercises. Somehow, it was making its way into a file in the offices of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Landsman is now working for the Detroit Free Press, but his file remains with the F.B.I. The Free, Press being one of t h e more enlightened metropolitan dailies in the country today, his job is probably not in danger. The Bureau, launched 40 years ago, was meant to aid local law enforcement agencies w h e n crime spilled over state borders and to enforce certain federal laws of specific nature. It was never designed, however, to be a national police force. The- Bureau of Narcotics, the Secret Service and other Treasury agents, and the Customs Border Guards are just a few of the other federal agents whose job it is to enforce specific sections of federal law. Yet, under the direction of J. Edgar Hoover, the Bureau has emerged in the public eye as a coldly efficient machine, enforcing the law, gunning down mobsters, catch- ing the commies, and, of late, hunting down the hippies. Each spring we are treated to Hoov- er's testimony before a House budget committee wherein he re- counts piles of statistics amass- ed by his ever more efficient agents in the field; behind those statistics, the real truth is that these agents are becom- ing a national police force. Wiretapping, photo surveillance of political gatherings, infiltra- tion of college campuses, and other distasteful symptoms of this type of activity point to the reality. National 'police forces, turned (Continued on Page 9) 1 BLUE DENIM: Super Slims .......6.50 Button-Fly.... 6.50 Traditional.......6.98 Bells............7.50. BLUE CHAMBRAY SHIRTS..........2.49 MORE LEVI'S "White" Levi's ... 5.50 (4 Colors) Sto-Prest "White" Levi's ........6.98 Nuvo's .........8.50 Over 7000 Pairs in Stock! Sam's Store 122 E. Washington 662-4251 740 PACKARD 662-4241 On With Hangers Dry Or 3 cCleaning Packaged Order HOURS COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY OPEN Mon. thru Fri. 7:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. MON.-SUN. 7:30 A.M. TO 11 P.M. 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